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Tuesday, 30 July 2024

Character and Persuasion



Some decades ago I read a Matthew Parris article where he wrote that his mother did not judge politics by policies or a left or right spectrum, but how decent and honest individual politicians seemed to be.

It’s something I’ve always remembered because decent and honest is how the political game should be played but isn't. Some politicians probably are decent and honest in private, especially those who avoid the caring, sharing, lying rhetoric and just tell it as it is. As for the others, we'd probably be appalled at how stupid and ghastly they are.


We believe good men more fully and more readily than others: this is true generally whatever the question is, and absolutely true where exact certainty is impossible and opinions are divided…

It is not true, as some writers assume in their treatises on rhetoric, that the personal goodness revealed by the speaker contributes nothing to his power of persuasion; on the contrary, his character may almost be called the most effective means of persuasion he possesses.

Aristotle - Rhetoric c. 336 - 330 B.C.


Of course Aristotle was right in his refined Athenian sense where politically active people were known to all who mattered. Today, many are still unpersuaded by the political rhetoric of dubious people, but unfortunately it no longer seem to matter.

Today we are persuaded to take sides with the charlatan and the fool, persuaded to cheer the rhetoric as if it were our own rhetoric, to cheer the political colour of it and discount or evade completely the dishonesty of the speaker.

So come on Ed, we know you can make Net Zero work when the Tories couldn't.

4 comments:

decnine said...

Trouble is that Ed thinks he can repeal the laws of thermodynamics. And he's prepared to spend all of our money on the effort. Hyperactive idiots are dangerous.

dearieme said...

Ed is going to save us £300 per year on energy bills. That nice Rachel has just cost most pensioners £200 - £300 winter fuel allowance. Brilliant!

Sam Vega said...

I first became aware of Matthew Parris when he took part in a documentary to see if he could live on the benefits that his own Tory government were providing. He'd said that it could be done, and when he failed, he was honest and magnanimous enough to admit his error and apologise. I thought this was a sign of good character.

That was in the 1980s. Since then, I've witnessed him double dealing like a criminal weasel over Brexit, and now think that he's a dishonest excuse for a human being. So opinions and characters can change...

A K Haart said...

decnine - I'm hoping he's in for a disastrous personal political failure so damaging that we never hear from him again. He deserves it.

dearieme - and they seem to assume that people won't notice. Ed will have to put those savings on hold too, maybe even Labour voters will notice that.

Sam - yes he used to write well and be worth reading, but that's decades ago now. As you say, he's just another weasel now.